ANA Holdings Inc will raise as much as 332.1bn yen ($3.2bn) via an overseas and domestic share placement as airlines around the world rush to shore up their finances amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Japan’s largest carrier, whose shares have slumped 30% this year, will use the proceeds to repay long-term debt and buy Boeing 787 aircraft to improve its capacity “to optimise supply to demand, and reduce negative environmental impacts,” according to a statement Friday.
Airlines globally are mired in their worst-ever crisis as passenger traffic plunges due to the outbreak and virus cases show no sign of abating across the Northern Hemisphere ahead of winter. While there’s hope a Covid-19 vaccine will get people back on planes, carriers are still expected to lose a combined $157bn in 2020 and 2021, according to the International Air Transport Association.
“We will accelerate our business reform while keeping our financial health,” Kimihiro Nakahori, ANA’s director of finance, said at a media briefing.
With the public offering and some 400bn yen in subordinated loans announced last month, the carrier will be able to maintain its shareholder equity ratio of around 32%. ANA aims to move that metric back to about 40% as soon as possible, Nakahori said.
“We can be reassured about ANA’s cash,” said Kotaro Toriumi, an independent aviation analyst. He also pointed to how Boeing 787 models have been useful in the pandemic because carriers can adjust the seat configurations. It’ll also be easier to manage pilots, he said.
Cost reductions: ANA had cash equivalents of 451bn yen as of September 30. Its shares dipped 1.7% on Friday.
ANA’s move comes after the nation’s other major carrier Japan Airlines Co last week said it would raise as much as much as $1.75bn in a share sale. JAL, which received a government bailout after filing for bankruptcy a decade ago, will offer the shares at a 3% discount. Some of the money it’s raising will be used to repay debt, with the goal of making it easier to issue bonds or borrow funds from banks in future, a JAL official said.
ANA is forecasting a record net loss of $4.8bn for the fiscal year through March 2021. It unveiled a restructuring plan last month that calls for, among other things, around 400bn yen in cost reductions by cutting procurement, office rents, the temporary transfer of hundreds of employees to other companies, and the retiring or halting of orders for 33 aircraft to bring the group’s fleet down to 276 planes.
Although Japan’s government launched a ‘GoTo’ domestic tourism campaign to prop up the deteriorating economy, it hasn’t been a great success with people reluctant to travel due to fear of catching the virus. Case numbers are spiking again in cities such as Tokyo and Osaka and economy minister Yasutoshi Nishimura said earlier this week the government is taking advice to possibly halt the campaign. Overseas visitors to Japan were down 99% in October from a year earlier as the country largely kept its borders shut.
Heizo Takenaka, an economist who served as a minister and is an adviser on Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s Growth Strategy Council, said this week that ANA and Japan Airlines will eventually need more support and that they should “become one.” 
In neighbouring South Korea, the two biggest airlines plan to merge, with Korean Air Lines Co hoping to acquire Asiana Airlines Inc.